Tag Archives: cotton

Zoukin (雑巾) are traditional Japanese cleaning cloths. Layers of cloth are hand stitched together with a sashiko stitch.

Used for general cleaning, especially floors, these textiles very resilient

You may have seen the image of school children holding the cloth against the floor and running up and down in systematic straight lines. This is known as zoukin gake and is a great way to make cleaning fun.

Of course, they are used at by all ages at home or elsewhere.

Vintage zoukin are very collectible. Often, they are made with high quality fabric such as aizome (indigo cotton) and kasuri (ikat). High quality fabrics such as these were never thrown away. To learn more about the tradition of mottainai (no waste) read my post on boro.

Collectors use zoukin in many ways.

Those with interesting designs can be framed and hung on the wall.

They make interesting place mats at the table. If you have a special ornament, seat it on a zoukin.

Each one is hand made at home and totally original. It is common for very skilled stitching to be used.

Perhaps the fabric was once part of a kimono that was repaired over and over again. The original patchwork could still be seen.

I have a collection of zoukin in my shop, FurugiStar. Stop by and take a look at all of my antique Japanese textiles.

After buying a boro scarf at a Tokyo flea market I wanted to learn more about the scruffy, stylish fabric. This lead to the unravelling of an interesting tale going back hundreds of years.

Boro was born of forgotten values of ‘mottainai’ or ‘too good to waste’. An idea dangerously lacking in the modern consumer lifestyle.

The charm of boro is not only the indigo shades and shabby street chic, or even its eco-friendliness. Sewn together over generations, family sagas are woven through the threads. click below to read on…